Interdental polish for very tight teeth: made of healing earth

My teeth are very tight and the nurse's help with professional teeth cleaning always failed.

They barely flossed between their teeth (it's not a problem for me, but I'm used to it), let alone the thin strips of sandpaper they used to try to remove the tea stains between their teeth.

End of the song: Either they did not get through or the strip / floss was pulled through so violently that she slipped with a jerk on the gum and cut it. Then the ladies gave up mostly.


I spend significantly more than 6 minutes a day with the dental care, but the tea still leaves visible discoloration over time, where the toothbrush is not getting right.

For all tea or coffee drinkers or smokers who have the same problem, I have a hot tip

Put a spoonful of healing clay in a bowl. Floss (preferably those that have fluffy, pipe brush-like places) moisten and pull through the healing earth. Take double, if possible, and off in the next interdental space (you yourself have it injury-free on it).

Scrub neatly up and down, rinse, brush teeth with a good Flouridgel, done. The spaces become so clean that no more help with emery paper approaches.


Of course, do this healing earth cleansing only when it is really necessary. For me, the effect lasts about half a year.

Incidentally, the healing clay can also be used to make great scrubs, masks and even "healing potions", so it will not be bad. Who buys them in the health food store, is also on the safe side, as far as unwanted additives.

And who now objects that the healing clay is abrasive: That's the emery paper at the dentist too. And it goes with it very different to the point - in some patients even four times a year.

Bracesquestions.com - Flossing With Braces, How to Floss Teeth | May 2024